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Activists Call For General Strike On the Tor Network (vice.com) 127

Reader derekmead writes: Some Tor users are very unhappy with the way the project has been run in recent months, and are calling for a blackout on September 1st. They are asking users to not use Tor, for developers to stop working on Tor, and for those who run parts of the network's infrastructure to shut it down. The disgruntled users feel that Tor can no longer be fully trusted after a brief hiring of an ex-CIA official and the internal sexual misconduct investigation against activist Jacob Appelbaum.
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Activists Call For General Strike On the Tor Network

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  • Dupe (Score:5, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 22, 2016 @10:26AM (#52748313)

    This same soap opera was just posted 11 hours ago. Is it really necessary to repost?

  • by Ubi_NL ( 313657 ) <joris.benschopNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Monday August 22, 2016 @10:27AM (#52748321) Journal

    https://politics.slashdot.org/... [slashdot.org]

    For some reason these dupes do make me feel at home here. The world is changing rapidly, but Slashdot stays just the way it is, with 15-year old layout and editors that cant even read their own front page.

    • Please don't mention the age of the layout, it might give them ideas...

    • with 15-year old layout

      That is a good thing. The layout on my browser is more than 15-years old, and I like it that way. Some of us like stability.

      As for Tor, screw them. It is not secure. If they want to shut it down, it will only serve as confirmation of its weaknesses. What we need is a system that can't be shut down.

    • by Thud457 ( 234763 )
      I too find it heartening that Manish is observing time-honored slashdot tradition.

      Now the posters honor tradition by with the traditional bitching and moaning pointing out the story's a dupe.
      The circle of life continues.
    • Dude quiet about the layout. The last thing this site needs is "modern web design" shitting all over it.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    I think you ran this last night, anyhow there are serious questions about the allegations given that one of the anonymous "victims" came forward, said the people involved had not even talked to her and had invented their own story that did not match what happened.

    But all this will get lost as people fight by making accusations about one another because nobody actually cares what happened, they're just here to tell others what horrible people they are to make themselves feel better. Okay, I'm done, your tur

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Just click and go to the first instance of this identical story...
    https://politics.slashdot.org/story/16/08/22/0319205/group-wants-to-shut-down-tor-for-a-day-on-september-1

  • I was wondering where I can submit my resume to become a Slashdot editor? Because a full-time salary for the total lack of effort sounds pretty great!
  • I'll be using Tor the same amount as always on that ludicrous MRA Protest Day. I might even use it a little more, just because.

    Maybe l'll use Tor to come to Slashdot and read the next dupe...

  • by sir-gold ( 949031 ) on Monday August 22, 2016 @11:04AM (#52748595)

    The argument against this "strike" is that it would shutdown TOR for a day, and would force journalists and dissidents to use a different (more risky) communication method instead.

    Do the strikers in the TOR group actually have the power to turn off TOR itself, or are they just threatening to shut down their personal nodes?

    If they really do have the power to completely turn off TOR worldwide, what is to stop that power being co-opted (or hacked) by a government?

  • by kheldan ( 1460303 ) on Monday August 22, 2016 @11:10AM (#52748651) Journal
    The way the Internet has been devolving into just one big surveillance/spying/malware platform, and now with ICANN ceding control over to someone else, the TOR network may become the last bastion of a truly free and open Internet. Yes, it's the Wild West inside there to be sure, but you do have a higher degree of anonymity and a lesser degree of being spied on and surveilled. I can see a possible future where onion routing networks, with sites operating within them, are the only relatively safe places you could go. Let's not start artillery barrages against TOR, okay?
    • I find it bizarre that anyone thinks that TOR was ever secure and private. Great in theory, and we need something to keep the spooks off our packets, but TOR has always been suspect.

      • If you have a better suggestion then I encourage you to fill us all in on the details of it. As anything you do or say on the Internet is subject to surveillance and theft, and I don't see any end to it. Criminals and foreign governments are hacking things constantly. Our own government is spying on everyone constantly. The ISPs we get our connectivity from is sifting every single packet for any personalized information they can sell to their 'partner' companies for purposes of profiling us and putting so-c
  • by Anonymous Coward

    and I wouldn't expect anything to change, duplicate stories are part of our DNA. The question becomes, why delete the old story?

  • Fear, uncertainty and doubt sown.
    Principals divided.
    While focus and energy is diverted to the search for "truth", the real truth is that fewer people will trust their secrets to Tor as a result.
    Mission accomplished.

  • by qeveren ( 318805 ) on Monday August 22, 2016 @03:47PM (#52751027)

    It doesn't sound like they're getting played by the intelligence agencies AT ALL.

As you will see, I told them, in no uncertain terms, to see Figure one. -- Dave "First Strike" Pare

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